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The first radio station in the Balkans and South-East Europe was established in Montenegro with the opening of a transmitter situated on the hill of Volujica near Bar by Knjaz Nikola I Petrović-Njegoš (1841–1921) on 3 August 1904.
In 1949, Radio Titograd was formed. In 1963, RTV Titograd was established, making Radio Titograd a part of it. In 1990, Radio Titograd changed its name to Radio Crne Gore.
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Dnevnik means "The Daily" or "Daily News" in South Slavic languages. It can also be translated as "Diary". Closely related Slavic variants of the word are Deník Dziennik and Дневник . It may refer to: In broadcasting. Dnevnik HRT, a Croatian TV news program broadcast daily on the Croatian Radiotelevision (HRT) at 19:30
Dnevnik MRT is the main news program of the MRT, broadcast daily at 19:30. Presenters. Years Presenter Macedonian Current role Dragi Arbirovski [1] retired
The tower of the Broadcasting Center in Prisavlje in 2013 An outside broadcast truck owned by HRT. Croatian Radiotelevision is the direct successor of Radio Station Zagreb (Radio stanica Zagreb) that started broadcasting on 15 May 1926, the first radio station to broadcast in the Balkans. [3]
At the same time, he worked as the head of DESK, a reporter on key political events in the country (meetings of the presidents of the Yugoslav republics). Hadžifejzović edited Dnevnik until July 2000. In ten years, he edited and ran 1,134 television Dnevniks. [2] From 1996 to 1998, he edited and hosted a remake of the talk show Face to Face.
Until early 2005, it was printed in broadsheet format, the last Bulgarian daily to use the large format. It adopted a compact format after research in 2005 found that more than 50% of the readers would prefer a smaller, thicker paper. Dnevnik's main editorial line is that the state should intervene less, and that business should have more freedom.